- The case for permanent stimulus - Paul Krugman (VoxEU)
- How COVID-19 is transforming the world economy - Kilic and Marin (VoxEU)
- When Do Shelter-in-Place Orders Fight Covid-19 Best? Policy Heterogeneity Across States and Adoption Time - Dave, Friedson, Matsuzawa and Sabia (SSRN)
- Liquidity Provision during a Pandemic - Kahn and Wagner (SSRN)
- The job numbers are horrible. But there’s more to this story - Betsey Stevenson (Washington Post)
I have written before about the investment dearth that took place in advanced economies at the same time that we witnessed a global saving glut as illustrated in the chart below. In particular, the 2002-2007 expansion saw lower investment rates than any of the previous two expansions. If one thinks about a simple demand/supply framework using the saving (supply) and investment (demand) curves, this means that the investment curve for these countries must have shifted inwards at the same time that world interest rates were coming down. But what about emerging markets? Emerging markets' investment did not fall during the last 10 years, to the contrary it accelerated very fast after 2000. This is more what one would expect as a reaction to the global saving glut. The additional saving must be going somewhere (saving must equal investment in the world). As interest rates are coming down, emerging markets engage in more investment (whether this is simply a move along a downward-sloppin...
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